Archaeology
Found in 499 Collections and/or Records:
Apocrypha-New English Bible: book notes, 1901-1975
Fallis Rees' book notes and articles on cross-world communications, together with information on American archaeological sites. Fallis F. Rees (1897-1980) was an amateur archaeologist who spent many years studying the ancient civilizations of Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Africa, and the possibility of cross-communication between those civilizations and the cultures developing in the new world.
'Arabs Discover America Before Columbus” by Prof. M. D. W. Jeffreys, from Muslim Digest, September, 1953: book notes and copies; Mu-Lan Pci - A Case for Pre-Columbian Transatlantic Travel by Arab Ships, by Hui-Lin Li.: book notes; Arts and Architecture of Ancient America by George Kiblev: book notes; and notes on other books on Mayan topics, 1901-1975
Fallis Rees' book notes and articles on cross-world communications, together with information on American archaeological sites. Fallis F. Rees (1897-1980) was an amateur archaeologist who spent many years studying the ancient civilizations of Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Africa, and the possibility of cross-communication between those civilizations and the cultures developing in the new world.
Archaeoastronomy and the Unwritten Evidence, by Gerald Hawkins: book notes; also notes on other books, 1909-1977
Fallis Rees' book notes and articles about ancient civilization. Fallis F. Rees (1897-1980) was an amateur archaeologist who spent many years studying the ancient civilizations of Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Africa, and the possibility of cross-communication between those civilizations and the cultures developing in the new world.
Archaeologia Mundi: Mesopotamia , book notes, 1909-1977
Fallis Rees' book notes and articles about Africa, Mesopotamia, and Asia. Fallis F. Rees (1897-1980) was an amateur archaeologist who spent many years studying the ancient civilizations of Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Africa, and the possibility of cross-communication between those civilizations and the cultures developing in the new world.
'Archaeological Reflections on the Philistine Problem,' by Trude Dothan, from Antiquity and Survival II, 1957. Plus 'Jewel in the Jungle' by Ted Morello in Americas, Vol. 11, n. 9, Sept,1959: notes and photos, 1901-1975
Fallis Rees' book notes and articles on cross-world communications, together with information on American archaeological sites. Fallis F. Rees (1897-1980) was an amateur archaeologist who spent many years studying the ancient civilizations of Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Africa, and the possibility of cross-communication between those civilizations and the cultures developing in the new world.
Archaeological Survey of Nubia Bul. I-II: notes, 1909-1977
Fallis Rees' book notes and articles about ancient Egypt and surrounding areas. Fallis F. Rees (1897-1980) was an amateur archaeologist who spent many years studying the ancient civilizations of Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Africa, and the possibility of cross-communication between those civilizations and the cultures developing in the new world.
Archaeological Survey of Nubia, Bulletins III-VII 1909: book notes, photos of skulls, 1909-1977
Fallis Rees' book notes and articles about ancient Egypt and surrounding areas. Fallis F. Rees (1897-1980) was an amateur archaeologist who spent many years studying the ancient civilizations of Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Africa, and the possibility of cross-communication between those civilizations and the cultures developing in the new world.
Archaeology: correspondence, newspaper clippings, notes, pamphlets, 1901-1975
Fallis Rees' book notes and articles on cross-world communications, together with information on American archaeological sites. Fallis F. Rees (1897-1980) was an amateur archaeologist who spent many years studying the ancient civilizations of Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Africa, and the possibility of cross-communication between those civilizations and the cultures developing in the new world.
Archaeology: correspondence,and pamphlet: Plants and the Migration of Pacific Peoples a Symposium by Ed. Jacques Barrau, from10th Pacific Science Congress, 1961, 1901-1975
Fallis Rees' book notes and articles on cross-world communications, together with information on American archaeological sites. Fallis F. Rees (1897-1980) was an amateur archaeologist who spent many years studying the ancient civilizations of Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Africa, and the possibility of cross-communication between those civilizations and the cultures developing in the new world.
Archaeology, Indians of Illinois, Iowa, Oregon, Alabama, Ice Age, 1938-1966
Magazine and newspaper articles, notes, unpublished papers